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  3. Short-lived reactive components substantially contribute to particulate matter oxidative potential.
 

Short-lived reactive components substantially contribute to particulate matter oxidative potential.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/87412
Publisher DOI
10.1126/sciadv.adp8100
PubMed ID
40106561
Description
Exposure to airborne particulate matter (PM) has been attributed to millions of deaths annually. However, the PM components responsible for observed health effects remain unclear. Oxidative potential (OP) has gained increasing attention as a key property that may explain PM toxicity. Using online measurement methods that impinge particles for OP quantification within seconds, we reveal that 60 to 99% of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and OP in secondary organic aerosol and combustion-generated PM have a lifetime of minutes to hours and that the ROS activity of ambient PM decays substantially before offline analysis. This implies that current offline measurement methods substantially underestimate the true OP of PM. We demonstrate that short-lived OP components activate different toxicity pathways upon direct deposition onto reconstituted human bronchial epithelia. Therefore, we suggest that future air pollution and health studies should include online OP quantification, allowing more accurate assessments of links between OP and health effects.
Date of Publication
2025-03-21
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Campbell, Steven J
Utinger, Battist
Barth, Alexandre
Leni, Zaira
Institute of Anatomy
Zhang, Zhi-Hui
Resch, Julian
Li, Kangwei
Steimer, Sarah S
Banach, Catherine
Gfeller, Benjamin
Wragg, Francis P H
Westwood, Joe
Wolfer, Kate
Bukowiecki, Nicolas
Ihalainen, Mika
Yli-Pirilä, Pasi
Somero, Markus
Kortelainen, Miika
Louhisalmi, Juho
Sklorz, Martin
Czech, Hendryk
di Bucchianico, Sebastiano
Streibel, Thorsten
Delaval, Mathilde N
Ruger, Christopher
Baumlin, Nathalie
Salathe, Matthias
Fang, Zheng
Pardo, Michal
D'Aronco, Sara
Giorio, Chiara
Shi, Zongbo
Harrison, Roy M
Green, David C
Kelly, Frank J
Rudich, Yinon
Paulson, Suzanne E
Sippula, Olli
Zimmermann, Ralf
Geiser, Marianne
Institute of Anatomy
Kalberer, Markus
Additional Credits
Institute of Anatomy
Series
Science Advances
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
ISSN
2375-2548
Access(Rights)
open.access
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